KINESIOL 1AA3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Superior Vena Cava, Inferior Vena Cava, Pericardial Fluid

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Mediastinum central core of thoracic cavity superior vena cava is transporting deoxygenated blood coming from peripheral tissue; has had. Right atrium receives blood from rest of body and from heart itself; fills up and moves into right ventricle, pushes blood out into pulmonary trunk and pulmonary arteries. Arteries with respect to pulmonary: vessels transporting deoxygenated blood. Vasculature generally supplying to the rest of the body, arteries carry oxygenated blood. After blood has had oxygen added to it from lungs it returns to left atrium from right and left pulmonary veins, where it generates sufficient pressures until it contracts to enter left ventricle. Left ventricle contracts to push blood out into aorta. First opening in right atrium returns deoxygenated blood from upper extremities, head and neck region through superior vena cava. Inferior vena cava delivers blood from areas below the heart. 3rd orifice returns deoxygenated blood through coronary sinus collects deoxygenated blood from heart itself.

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